How does the sitemap work?

Understanding the sitemap is critical to understanding how your
site is put together. It is divided into three navigational
groups -
global nav, utility nav and hidden nav - to allow you to easily
put together a site based on solid architecture principles.

Homepage anywhere

Every aspect of the sitemap is re-orderable:
simply click the ‘Reorder navigation’ button and shift
aspects of your site around to best fit your requirements. While
you are re-ordering you can also choose to set your
homepage: any data added to the root of your site can act
as a homepage: so you can choose to show your latest blog posts,
your latest photos, or any page as a homepage.

Add something

Another important aspect of the sitemap is the ‘Add
something’ button: use this to add stuff to your site, and
once you’ve added something your sitemap will automatically
be updated with this new content. From the sitemap you can
add pages to your site, you can add
content to existing sections, or you can add new
sections to your site.

Edit anything

On the sitemap you can see everything: all your pages as well as
all your sections (post & photo sections). This allows you to
click into any content area of your site in order to easily manage
your content. Bear in mind when you click into a page you only see
surrounding pages in the sidebar, not the rest of the site as you
are now editing pages and focus shifts to this new context.